If a noun ends with a sound that doesn’t slide smoothly into an “s” sound, you add “-es.” This happens a lot with words that end in sibilant sounds like “-sh,”“-ch,”“-x,”“-z,” and “-s.” For example, “church” becomes “churches.”“Buzz” becomes “buzzes....
Nouns that are both singular and plural While the preceding section goes into how some English nouns are irregular in the way they change form to become plural, there’s another group of nouns whose plurals are irregular in a different way: They don’t change form at all to become plural....
The triplets of words also emphasized, as Štraus also noted in his letter to Beke, that the meeting was not bilateral, but involved a more complex set of relationships. While artists from Hungary thought to address their counterparts in Czechoslovakia, the art circles in Prague, Brno, and B...